Ecocide: Criminalising Environmental Destruction
This is your opportunity to gain insight into Ecocide, which has now been defined and submitted as draft international law. In a historic first, this law is intended to be adopted by the International Criminal Court to prosecute the most egregious offences against the environment. This is huge step forward and a key area watch so make sure you get all the information right here first. WEB229NZA17
Description
Attend and earn 1.5 CPD hours
Ecocide is broadly understood to mean mass damage and destruction of ecosystems: severe harm to nature which is widespread or long-term. Ecocide, committed repeatedly over decades, is a root cause of the climate and ecological emergency that we now face. You will examine and analyse:
- What is Ecocide, and why should it be an international crime
- Discuss the Ecocide international movement
- Analyse the legal definition of Ecocide (so far)
- Context of Ecocide within the regime of International Criminal Court: how it compares with other crimes
- Current status of the campaign to get Ecocide included in the Rome Statute
Presented by Alan Webb, Barrister, Quay Chambers and Lyndon DeVantier PhD, Marine Scientist, Coral Reef Research, Inc.
Learning Objective:
- Receive guidance and insight into the emerging area of ecocide
Presenters
Alan Webb
Alan has over 28 years of experience in litigating company, contract, commercial, negligence, property, resource management and land disputes. He has extensive appellate Court experience. He also has experience in the District Court Civil and Criminal jurisdictions, the Environment Court, Council resource consent hearings, hearings before Parliamentary Select Committees, the Commerce Commission, and in Arbitral proceedings.
Lyndon DeVantier, PhD
A marine scientist, Lyndon has worked with government and non-government organizations across the Indo-Pacific region since the early 1980s. His main career goals are to improve understanding of the structure and function of marine ecosystems, and to assist in the development of effective management for their long-term sustainability, with a focus on Marine Protected Areas and threatened species. A member of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature Specialist Group on reef-building corals, Lyndon has coauthored more than 150 research papers and technical reports, and several books. He is a co-author of the open access website www.coralsoftheworld.org.